logo
Doctors call for NZ to ditch 'outdated' endometriosis guidelines

Doctors call for NZ to ditch 'outdated' endometriosis guidelines

RNZ News15 hours ago
Endometriosis affects about one in 10 women and girls in New Zealand.
Photo:
123rf
New Zealand's "outdated" guidelines for treating the pelvic inflammatory disease endometriosis are delaying diagnosis and treatment for sufferers, warns an advocacy group.
Endometriosis New Zealand spokesperson Dr Michael Wynn-Williams said new guidelines developed by the the Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists were already being implemented in Australia for the painful condition, which affects about one in 10 women and girls.
"This new guideline represents the gold standard in evidence-based care and is already being implemented across Australia," said Wynn-Williams, who chairs the clinical advisory committee.
It recommends the use of non-invasive imaging, such as pelvic ultrasound, as a first-line diagnostic tool, moving away from reliance on diagnostic laparoscopy, which has contributed to long wait times for diagnosis.
The current 2020 Ministry of Health document was no longer fit for purpose and needed to be urgently replaced with the new Australian Living Evidence Guideline, he said.
"Our current guideline is now outdated, and out of step with modern diagnostic and treatment practices.
"By contrast, RANZCOG's new guideline reflects the latest evidence and provides clear recommendations for early diagnosis, as well as first-line hormonal treatment to be run in parallel with diagnostic investigations. These are crucial to reducing the delays in diagnosis and treatment that too many patients still experience."
Endometriosis New Zealand chief executive Tanya Cooke said adopting the new guideline would bring New Zealand into line with global best practice, and ensure patients received faster, less invasive and more equitable care.
"We have written to the ministry and Te Whatu Ora, urging them to adopt the new guideline as soon as possible," she said. "It's also really important that they work with RANZCOG and others to support application of it across the sector, and for the benefit of the 120,000 New Zealanders living with endometriosis."
A Health Ministry spokesperson said it was "grateful for the important work that RANZCOG has undertaken in developing these guidelines to support clinical care in this important aspect of women's health".
"These guidelines represent a valuable resource, informing clinicians of evidence regarding diagnosis, management and care of people living with endometriosis.
"Health New Zealand has established processes, through clinical networks and health pathways, to consider clinical guidelines and how they might influence on clinical service delivery to achieve better outcomes for New Zealanders."
Health NZ national chief medical officer Professor Dame Helen Stokes-Lampard said clinical guidelines and health pathways were reviewed regularly.
"Our immediate focus is on urgent patients and those who have been waiting the longest for treatment," she said. "We continue to work hard to put in place systems and processes, so improvements to waiting times are made."
Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero
,
a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

New mental health ward due to open a decade after facility failed patients
New mental health ward due to open a decade after facility failed patients

RNZ News

timean hour ago

  • RNZ News

New mental health ward due to open a decade after facility failed patients

Warning: This story contains details some readers may find distressing Palmerston North Hospital's new mental health ward. Photo: RNZ / Jimmy Ellingham Palmerston North Hospital's long-awaited new mental health ward could open late next month - a decade after the present facility was declared unfit for purpose. Construction of the the $65 million facility started in 2023. Shaun Gray died by suicide in April 2014 at Palmerston North Hospital mental health ward. Photo: Supplied "We don't have an official opening date yet for the acute mental health unit, but it's currently scheduled to be late September," said a Health NZ spokesperson. In 2015, the current ward, which is about 20 years old, was declared unfit for purpose during investigations and reviews into the deaths of two ward patients the previous year. Shaun Gray died by suicide in April 2014, while Erica Hume died in a suspected suicide the following month. In a lengthy decision released this year, Coroner Matthew Bates found Gray was failed by staff at a facility that was not up to scratch. "All available steps should be taken to ensure the new inpatient facility currently under construction opens as soon as possible to ensure mental health service users in the region can receive the best available care in a much safer environment than the current ward 21," the coroner wrote. He is yet to deliver his findings into Hume's death . Before the 2020 election, then-Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern announced a new $35m ward had ministerial sign-off and was to open in late 2022, but that date came and went without construction beginning. Then, in early 2023, it was revealed that costs had escalated. Health NZ MidCentral group director of operations Sarah Fenwick said a "detailed transition plan" would ensure the move between wards as smooth for patients and their families. "This includes orientation to the new facility, and allowing time for staff and patients to become familiar with the new environment. Our priority is to support continuity of care and wellbeing throughout the transition." Health NZ was recruiting to make sure the new unit was fully staffed when it opened, Fenwick said. "Registered nurse posts are currently being advertised and we are optimistic that these roles will be filled in time to reflect the increased capacity of the new facility." Fifty-five full-time equivalent nurses worked at the ward and there were 3.3 full-time equivalent vacancies. Six full-time equivalent doctor positions are full, with four vacancies among health service assistants. Since 2014, other patients at the mental health ward have died in suspected suicides or suicides, either onsite or after leaving hospital grounds. RNZ has previously reported the death of 19-year-old patient Braden on the ward. If it is an emergency and you feel like you or someone else is at risk, call 111.

Three fires across country over weekend
Three fires across country over weekend

RNZ News

timean hour ago

  • RNZ News

Three fires across country over weekend

Fire investigators will return to the scene of a blaze in the former Seaview Psychiatric Hospital in Hokitika, which is being treated as suspicious. Photo: RNZ / Richard Tindiller Two house fires kept fire fighters in Auckland and the Manawatū District busy overnight while - further south - investigators will return to the scene of a suspicious fire in the former Seaview Psychiatric Hospital in Hokitika. Fire crews worked to extinguish a house fire in a single story home in Feilding which began shortly before 2am. A FENZ spokesperson said six fire trucks - from Feilding, Bunnythorpe, Milson, Palmerston North - fought the blaze. One person was treated for possible smoke inhalation by ambulance staff at the scene. The spokesperson said the blaze was suppressed by 3.40am but, as of 6am, five crews remained at the scene dampening down hotspots and monitoring for flare ups. The fire is not being treated as suspicious at this stage. Fire crews in Auckland were called to a home in Bombay at 7.17pm on Sunday. The single story residence was well alight by the time crews arrived and, at it's peak, six fire appliances supported by two water tankers fought the blaze. There were no reports of occupants in the building and no injuries were reported. Fire investigators will return to the scene on Monday morning to determine the cause of the fire. Meanwhile, on the West Coast of the South Island, fire investigators will return to the scene of a blaze in the former Seaview Psychiatric Hospital in Hokitika. The fire - which was well involved by the time fire crews arrived shortly after 7.11am on Sunday - is being treated as suspicious . The building had been abandoned after being used as a backpackers and campsite for several years following the closure of the hospital. There were no reports of injuries in the fire. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

Seaview Hospital fire: Building's long history in Hokitika
Seaview Hospital fire: Building's long history in Hokitika

RNZ News

timean hour ago

  • RNZ News

Seaview Hospital fire: Building's long history in Hokitika

Hokitika's abandoned Seaview Hospital burned on Sunday Morning. Photo: Google Maps It has been a prison, a home for the mentally unwell and a spooky backpackers - and now it is the scene of a suspicious fire. Seven fire crews raced to Hokitika's abandoned Seaview Hospital on Sunday morning, perched on the hill just north of the town, to find the Kotuku building well alight in a spectacular blaze. It was out by evening, but the cause of the fire is now under investigation . Inside the Seaview Hospital. Photo: Supplied / Jane Comeau Historian Jane Comaeu wrote her masters thesis on the hospital - formerly known as Seaview Asylum - and its role in Hokitika's history. She said it began as a wing of the jail, housing people who were considered a threat to themselves or others, in 1871. Old baths remain in some rooms of the hospital. Photo: Supplied / Jane Comeau Public outcry over the treatment of mental patients saw it separated from the main jail building soon afterwards, and given its own superintendent. Psychiatric hospitals often had pretty negative connotations, Comeau said, and often for good reason. "They're spooky, they have ghosts, there's all this trauma - but I think there's this overlooked element of asylums* where they were a respite for people who didn't have a lot else for them in their life." Many who had been housed there suffered from illnesses they were never going to recover from, like dementia or "tertiary syphilis", Comeau said - people who "just needed a place to decline". But they were not as excluded from society as they would have been in other hospitals around the country. It was only a 15-minute walk from the Hokitika township, and the doctor would cycle up there every day. The inhabitants would be taken into town for excursions, and people from the town would come up for dances and parties. Many were cured, and some, when given the chance to leave, chose not to. "The West Coast was full of itinerant miners, people with nowhere to go, people with few social connections, and sometimes it was a choice between the asylum and nothing at all," Comeau said. Paul Breeze, who worked as a nurse at the hospital in the 1990s, said the hospital was a huge employer for Hokitika before dairy took over. "There was a time when there was hardly a household that didn't have a member of the family working there," he said. The patients who ended up there had often landed in the too-hard basket, he said - but they were treated well. It became a self-sufficient little community. By the late 1990s it was beginning to grow its own food, and even had its own fire brigade. Breeze likened it to the iconic British wartime sitcom Dad's Army - nobody was appropriately trained, but staff from various wards pitched in, driving about in a 1932 Ford V8. The brigade stayed active until the hospital's closure in the early 2000s, with only a handful of patients left to transfer elsewhere. The Kotuku building part of Seaview Hospital which burned down on Sunday. Photo: Google Maps Comeau visited the place herself in 2020. "You go through the door and there's a room full of metal bedframes all packed together, and then you walk down a hallway where the ceiling's partially collapsed, and you go into another room and there's a couple of old baths with metal railing where the curtains would have gone," she said. "And then you would have gone into an old games room, or living room, where there's a bunch of old chairs and graffiti all over the walls." Part of the precinct was used as a backpackers and campsite, called Seaview Lodge and Backpackers, for a number of years. The earliest review on Tripadvisor was left in December 2013, and according to later reviews, it remained open until February, with one guest calling it "an amazing place", and "a real curiosity to look around and find ward beds set up". The final review, in July, noted: "The place has once again been abandoned and a member of the cleaning staff advised that it's all closed again, including the hostel." "The graveyard is still eerie," it said. RNZ understands the building which caught on fire was not one used as part of the backpackers. *The word asylum is considered outmoded and often offensive, but Jane Comeau uses it here in order to reflect the attitudes towards mental health at the time. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store